A
president who “won” despite getting fewer votes than his opponent
should have to work very hard to be elected again. If he also presided
over the loss of 2 million jobs he ought to be in even bigger trouble.
If that president is also bogged down militarily in a foreign country
when he said the mission was already accomplished his problems
would seem to be insurmountable. His political obituary should
be written if 3,000 people died after warnings of a terror attack
were ignored or mishandled. Fortunately for President George W.
Bush his opponent is Senator John Kerry, a man who can’t seem to
profit from the President’s failures and lies.
The
Democratic party is headed for defeat if the nominee can’t articulate
coherent policies in response to Bush administration incompetence.
On the same day that National Security Adviser Condoleezza Rice
was on the hot seat before the commission investigating September
11th, Kerry had no comment about the commission, or about Rice’s
testimony. Instead he declared in a speech on economic policy that
he would eliminate portions of his own domestic agenda in order
to have a balanced budget. As Bush’s Iraq policy unraveled before
our eyes Kerry’s only comment was to say that he didn’t have a
comment. Because he already gave two speeches to wonkish establishment
audiences he didn’t feel the
need to add very much on the
subject of Iraq.
It
is just as well. When he does have the courage to say something
we get these gems of wisdom.
Poor Kerry
keeps repeating what he has been saying for months when the Iraq
situation is constantly changing. At this juncture it is useless
to expect other nations to step into the mess they predicted would
take place. When European nations told us not to hit the hornet nest
we called them “old Europe,” refused to use the word “French” with
anything, including potatoes, and demonized them as ungrateful appeasers.
Old Europe is now saying I told you so and laughing at America’s
expense. They are not going to follow John Kerry’s advice and jump
in when marines are fighting house to house in Fallujah.
While
Americans watched scenes of carnage administration officials
backtracked from previous comments that either made the case
for going to war
or that made it all seem easy. Secretary of State Colin Powell
has confessed that his performance at the United Nations
last year, complete with a prop vial of fake anthrax, was based
on information that “…it now appears wasn’t so solid.” Secretary
of Defense Donald Rumsfeld flip flopped from his insistence
in 2003 that more troops aren’t needed in Iraq. He now says
that more may be on the way. If Kerry is at a loss for comments
on Iraq he
should at least be able to point out when administration officials
have lied to the American people about going to war.
Kerry’s
difficulty in engaging the President on Iraq stems in large
part from his 2002 vote in favor of the use of force resolution.
The resolution not only gave the President approval to attack
militarily but it also allowed him to keep Congress in the
dark for 48 hours
after starting a war. John Kerry voted to cut himself and his
colleagues out of the loop.
He
has tried to have it both
ways ever since. When Howard
Dean was the flavor of the month in the fall of 2003 Kerry
voted against
$87 billion to pay for the reconstruction of Iraq. Now he doesn’t
want to own up to cutting the Bush purse strings. “I actually
did vote for the $87 billion, before I voted against it.”
The
Kerry strategy seems to be based on hope. He hopes that the economy
will not improve before November and that Iraq will be such a mess
that he won’t have to say anything about it. This passivity is
fatal in a presidential election. Incumbents are not unseated unless
their challengers actually challenge them.
Other
Democrats must also stop being passive with Kerry. When Kerry
came close to backing the Bush policy of ousting Hugo Chavez,
the elected
President of Venezuela, Democrats were silent. It was obvious
that the linking of Chavez with Fidel Castro was an attempt
to get the
votes of Florida’s Cuban community. Florida Cubans are solidly
Republican. Democratic saber rattling at Castro never changes
that fact. Kerry not only sold
his soul but he sold his
soul in
a losing effort.
Pandering
in Florida raises other issues of course. Florida should no
longer be called the Sunshine State. Since November 2000
it has been the
Amnesia State. Kerry and the rest of the Democratic party establishment
refuse to talk about how the state was really lost. Thousands
of eligible voters, most of them black, were removed from
the rolls
months before Election Day. Kerry has said nothing about the
vote purge and nothing about the new electronic voting machines
that
will make fraud
easy and difficult to trace.
Kerry
can be carried over the finish line if Democrats aren’t afraid to
embrace a good fight on policy issues and admit that the nominee
is in serious need of help. Unity is the mantra for Democrats these
days. Political unity usually comes about after post-argument kissing
and making up. Democrats must speak up when Kerry tries to be Bush
light or doesn’t know what to do when opportunity knocks at his door. Kerry
was given a gift when Iraq and 9/11 both broke in his favor. If he
can’t capitalize when the tide turns in his favor and the party
doesn’t take him to task we can prepare to watch another Bush inauguration
in January.
Margaret
Kimberley’s Freedom Rider column appears weekly
in . Ms.
Kimberley is a freelance writer living in New York City. She
can be reached via e-Mail at [email protected]. You can read more
of Ms. Kimberley's writings at http://freedomrider.blogspot.com/